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  • That's a good argument for Snaps & Flatpaks, not for putting an alias in place so "apt install Firefox" gets translated to "snap install org.mozilla.firefox" (or whatever the exact app name is). Corporate clients manage their systems as a fleet anyway, if the IT department sets it up a certain way their employees don't fiddle with this stuff. There's no good argument to redirect a users' CLI commands to whatever Canonical believes is better.

  • I find it absolutely baffling how an equal amount of people voting on this comment seem to honestly believe that it would've been a realistic option for the majority of people (or even everyone) to get one of those Linux books and read hundreds of sites to fully understand everything necessary to manually setup a LAN party in a reasonable time. On 4 to 16 computers. Are all gamers expected to also be interested in IT enough to read such books? Are they supposed to magically know the existence of manpages? Of course not, 90% of private LANs in the early 2000's would've simply not happened without easily navigable GUIs. At least not with computers.

    The ignorance by so many in the Linux community regarding GUI is both baffling and infuriating.

  • I once recharged my vegetable chipper at my desktop computers which honestly was weird enough.

  • In terms of polish Ubuntu is excellent. Problem is their policies and stupid decisions over the years, resulting in really unnecessary tech problems for anyone who wants more than just install apps via their App Store. Not to mention the inbuilt ads for Amazon, like, 10 years ago… or them recently deciding that it would be a good idea to alias some apt commands, so if you're a power user and try to install f.e. Firefox with your CLI it would instead execute the command to install it as snap. Shit like that is just outright disrespectful to the user.

  • It see's the US as AI slop?

    For the sake of this meme I'll just assume it's meant to be meta as fuck.

  • Once you realise...

    Jump
  • We already do that, it's simply covered up by capitalism and distance. Those who die mostly are in the poorest regions of Earth while everyone else complains about higher prices.

    With the Ukraine invasion the grain supply also took a hit, yet western shelves (and garbage containers) were always filled to the brim. Those who died because of it died in the shadows, at least from most people's perspective.

  • Cinnamon, most commonly known from Mint. There are also Fedora and Ubuntu spins for it.

  • I was answering your last point. I didn't react to the first one because implying the big Linux DEs of user-friendly distros (usually Cinnamon, KDE or Gnome) were bad is just utter nonsense. Incomplete at times in regards to very specialised administrative tasks, sure. But the features and menus that exist are generally well made.

  • I also think navigating is easy, doesn't mean anyone asking for initial help using a GPS app to get on track should from now on use a book with relative directions explained in text.

  • You're the only one rambling about coding right now, Apocalypteroid just used the word once; given he's a self-described novice it's safe to assume the word was used in a generalizing manner to describe any kind of bash, command line magic or config file syntax (as little as there is, there still is more or less basic syntax you have to adhere to. Enthusiasts might not even realize this anymore). Your comments do make a good example of the communication problem between novices and Linux/IT enthusiasts though. Your expectation towards people who aren't into a topic to use perfect terminology in their questions is both naive and inconsiderate. It's no wonder people got angry with you.

    To answer your last question regarding "understand filesystem (paradigms)": Coming from Windows people rarely, if ever, had to learn about any kind of filesystem; if they had to most people just right-clicked and formatted a disk. While saying that "ext4 is standard" would be rather straight-forward, more and more distros come with btrfs. Additionally it's important to know about exfat to not let them run into awful situations with incompatible USB sticks and such. Of course this can and should be shown using their distro's native Disk Utility, i.e. Gnome Disks, KDE Partition Manager or whatever comes with or at a minimum a common tool like GParted so they can safely interact with their own devices.

  • Too many people expect you to know and understand gnu-utils and all the common config file, filesystem and folder structure paradigms though. Which is the problem.

  • The one enabling people to understand and use their devices on their own. Once you can use a mouse or touchpad, you can navigate the UI. Good UI/UX conveys function. Checkboxes insert the correct configuration in the background without possibly hazardous typos.

    The CLI does nothing of this for the user, to understand it users have to invest tens, if not hundreds of hours before they get a hang of all essential commands, paradigms and tools to help themselves. They have to become IT intermediates just to use their computers.

    By providing a single CLI command (which, in the worst case, gets copied by a third user on an incompatible system configuration breaking everything) instead of pointing at the GUI tools most user-friendly distros already provide you do, in many cases, a disservice to the average user who just wants their problem to be fixed. They will not be able to help themselves next time for a similar issue.

  • That sounds awfully derogative towards the average user.

  • HDR works fine with Plasma (KDE). Regarding MO2, do you think the Nexus Mods app could eventually replace it? They work on a native client that already supports a few games.

  • Dude, I just ranted. I don't expect this meme to do anything, neither does anyone owe me something. It just showed this general vibe in the community about what they think is "simple" I had the desire to call out here because I think it can be harmful to common users. So I engaged in discourse about this aspect. If you see it differently that's fine, we probably won't be friends. Outside of jokes (which I thought I made clear by specifically marking it as a rant) I will keep working on changing desktop' Linux public image away from only-for-CLI-nerds towards a potentially user-friendly option for everyone (potentially = the distros made to be like that) even if you don't like that.

    Whatever you think you understand, it certainly isn't my point. "Let Linux be Linux" makes me question whether you even understand how divers "Linux" is.

  • On most recent Plasma (KDE) I can confirm HDR also just works (tested on AMD). I do miss a contrast slider though, SDR titles seem a little bit bright.

    Of course Nvidia didn't port "RTX HDR" yet. They're preoccupied fixing their driver mess by building a completely new one (NVK), so for the foreseeable future it's still better to run AMD with Linux.

  • That doesn't seem true unless you already require specific software or plugins. If you're just getting into it and still have the ability to choose freely without losses, DAWs like Bitwig Studio, Reaper, even Ardour will get you there. There's a wide range of fully working DACs, now with the Pipewire audio backend you don't have to meddle with Pulseaudio and/or Jack anymore either. There's also a wide range of plugins etc. Collected some info about those a while ago (when I thought I had time for extensive blogging, lol).

    To be fair, that's all for audio production, not necessarily restoration(?). Perhaps you know something about that specific niche I don't.

  • I have the strong urge to point out it's the other way around; Adobe and Autodesk have to support Linux. You're of course right though, with the strong lock-in effect from those big companies it's almost impossible to switch unless done on company-level. And even then project partners will expect files to be in a specific (proprietary) format most of the time.

    It was really disheartening to see Ondsel ES fail, it was a valiant attempt at creating a business-grade Open-Source CAD solution based on FreeCAD. Unfortunately Autodesk's monopoly extinguished any attempt at finding funding, despite existing interest by those who actually use that stuff (I assume Autodesk is fucking expensive like any monopoly software...). Education, Production, Distribution… those few big companies own and control literally every part. It would probably take both governmental effort as well as some kind of soft UI-standardisation to crack these power structures.

  • You clearly didn't understand the point of my original rant. Also no, people don't necessarily know how to use the package manager via CLI. Tools like Discover and Gnome Software exist for a reason, and people who feel more comfortable using them (instead of a CLI, which is a literal black box to common people) get harshly ignored by people who argue exactly like you. This is about accessibility, and these exact discussions are the reason I'm pissed.